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7-letter words containing p, a, c

  • dispace — to move or travel about
  • duchamp — Marcel [mar-sel] /marˈsɛl/ (Show IPA), 1887–1968, French painter, in U.S. after 1915 (brother of Raymond Duchamp-Villon and Jacques Villon).
  • earpick — an implement for picking at the ear and removing earwax
  • ecap ii — Electronic Circuit Analysis Program. Simple language for analysing electrical networks. "Introduction to Computer Analysis: ECAP for Electronics Technicians and Engineers", H. Levin, P-H 1970.
  • echappe — a ballet movement in which the dancer jumps from the fifth position and lands on the toes or the balls of the feet in the second position.
  • ectopia — the usually congenital displacement of an organ or part.
  • ectypal — a reproduction; copy (opposed to prototype).
  • edaphic — related to or caused by particular soil conditions, as of texture or drainage, rather than by physiographic or climatic factors.
  • emplace — To assign a position to something, or to locate something at a particular place.
  • encamps — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of encamp.
  • enclasp — Hold tightly in one's arms.
  • end cap — An end cap is a rack or counter at the end of a store aisle used to display promotional or sale items.
  • epacrid — a type of heath-like plant of the family Epacridaceae
  • epacris — (botany) Any of the genus Epacris of shrubs.
  • eparchs — Plural form of eparch.
  • eparchy — A province of the Orthodox Church.
  • epicarp — (botany) Exocarp.
  • episcia — a creeping plant of the genus Episcia
  • epochal — Forming or characterizing an epoch; epoch-making.
  • escalop — A scallop.
  • escaped — Simple past tense and past participle of escape.
  • escapee — A person who has escaped from somewhere, especially prison.
  • escaper — Person who escapes.
  • escapes — Plural form of escape.
  • escarps — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of escarp.
  • exocarp — The outer layer of the pericarp of a fruit.
  • eyecaps — Plural form of eyecap.
  • face up — facing upwards
  • graphic — giving a clear and effective picture; vivid: a graphic account of an earthquake.
  • hack up — (jargon)   To hack, but generally implies that the result is a quick hack. Contrast this with hack on. To "hack up on" implies a quick-and-dirty modification to an existing system. Contrast hacked up; compare kluge up, monkey up, cruft together.
  • haircap — any moss of the genus Polytrichum
  • haptics — Usually, haptics. Digital Technology. a vibration or other tactile sensation received from a computer or electronic device: You can save power by adjusting the haptics and brightness of your phone. an input or output device that senses the body's movements by means of physical contact with the user: joysticks and other haptics.
  • hepatic — of or relating to the liver.
  • hepcats — Plural form of hepcat.
  • hopsack — bagging made chiefly of hemp and jute.
  • hot cap — a plastic or paper bag or small tentlike structure placed over plants in early spring to protect them from frost.
  • hubcaps — Plural form of hubcap.
  • ice cap — small ice mass in high area
  • icecaps — Plural form of icecap.
  • icepack — Alternative spelling of ice pack.
  • impacts — Plural form of impact.
  • impeach — to accuse (a public official) before an appropriate tribunal of misconduct in office.
  • inclasp — enclasp.
  • ink-cap — any of several saprotrophic agaricaceous fungi of the genus Coprinus, whose caps disintegrate into a black inky fluid after the spores mature. It includes the shaggy ink-cap (Coprinus comatus), also called lawyer's wig, a distinctive fungus having a white cylindrical cap covered with shaggy white or brownish scales
  • inscape — the unique essence or inner nature of a person, place, thing, or event, especially depicted in poetry or a work of art.
  • ipecacs — Plural form of ipecac.
  • isopach — a line drawn on a map connecting all points of equal thickness of a particular geologic formation.
  • jack up — an increase or rise: a recent jack-up in prices.
  • jack-up — any of various portable devices for raising or lifting heavy objects short heights, using various mechanical, pneumatic, or hydraulic methods.
  • jackpot — the chief prize or the cumulative stakes in a game or contest, as in bingo, a quiz contest, or a slot machine.
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